100%

Scanned image of the page. Keyboard directions: use + to zoom in, - to zoom out, arrow keys to pan inside the viewer.

Page Options

Download this Issue

Share

Something wrong?

Something wrong with this page? Report problem.

Rights / Permissions

This collection, digitized in collaboration with the Michigan Daily and the Board for Student Publications, contains materials that are protected by copyright law. Access to these materials is provided for non-profit educational and research purposes. If you use an item from this collection, it is your responsibility to consider the work's copyright status and obtain any required permission.

November 04, 1984 - Image 7

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1984-11-04

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

Field Hockey
vs. Purdue
Today, 11:00 a.m.
Ferry Field

SPORTS

Volleyball
vs. Eastern Michigan
Tuesday, 7:00 p.m.
CCRB

The Michigan Daily Sunday, November 4, 1984 Pgel
dp

t-
By TOM KEANEY
Special to the Daily a
DURHAM, N.H. - If Friday night's c
loss was a result of penalties, last
night's loss to the University of New s
Hampshire came because the s
IWolverines were just plain outplayed. r
Senior goaltender Mark Chiamp was f
peppered with 51 shots as the Wildcats
c'obberred the Wolverines, 9-4 inB
; nively Arena.-
-"THEY OUTPLAYED us in both gamesd
said Chiamp. "They kept coming and t
coming; the puck just wasn't going our
way."
After looking flat the last two periods
,n Friday night, Michigan came out
Mast night still looking ragged.
UNH was extremely effective in
isolating the Wolverine defense and
working a man free for breakaway op-
portunities.
ONE SUCH instance gave the Wild-
cats an early lead at 2:07 of the first
period. Defenseman Brian Byrnes led
center Ralph Robinson with a slick
breakaway pass. Robinson deked
.Chiamp, beating him to the right side
for a 1-0 lead.
The Wolverines tied the game, 1-1,
when Brad McCaughey intercepted a
Wildcat pass at the. blue line. The
Ireshman had it knocked away but_
"Brad Jones, following up on the play,
shoveled it past goaltender Bruce
Gillies.
4 From there it was all New Ham-
pshire.
STHE WILDCATS kept creating two-

sweei
n-one and breakaway opportunities
arrying a 3-1 lead into the first inter-
nission.
UNH came out strong again in the
econd period, adding to their lead as
ophomore James Richmond took a
ebound and fired it into the open net
or a 4-1 lead.
Michigan kicked back though when
Brad Jones took a Brad McCaughey
)ass from behind the net and put it un-
Iernearth Gillies for his second goal of
he night, ninth of the season.

PS

; crushes

'M' ice rs,

JUST ONE minute later, Ray Dries
pulled the Wolverines to within one,
scoring off a mishandled Gillies save.
Finally Michigan had the momen-
tum. The offense was hungry around
the net and looked ready to take con-
trol. It was not to be.
A defensive lapse gave the Wildcats a
2-0 break and Peter Herms his second
goal of the season.
"THAT WAS the goal that hurt us the
most," said Michigan head coach Red
Berenson. "It seemed to demoralize the
Bad weekendi
FIRST PERIOD
Scring: UNH-Robinson (Byrnes( 2:07; 1. M-Jones
(McCaughey) 7:40; 2. UNH-Leach (Herms, Byr-
nes) 15:19; 3. UNH-Douris (Richmond, Lee) 16:38.
Penalties: M-Lorden (unnecessary roughness)
13:23; M-Neff (holding) 13:23; UNH-Douris
(roughing) 13:23; M-Seychel (slashing) 19:57.
SECOND PERIOD
Scoring: 4. UNH-Richmond (Douris, Byrnes)
3:57; 2. M-Jones (McCaughey) 7:35; 3. M-Dries
(Seychel, Downing) 8:35; 5. UNH-Herms (Douris,
Lee) 11:00; 6. UNH-Robinson (Leach, Rossetti)
12:20.
Penalties: M-Goff, P. (slashing) 3:01;
UNH-Ellison (slashing) 3:01; M-Dries (tripping)
4:59; UNH-Robinson (charging) 8:47; M-Jones
(high sticking) 17:20; M-McCaughey (highsticking)
17:20; UNH-Rossetti (highsticking) 17:20.

team."
Just over a minute later UNH
regained their three goal cushion on a
slipshot by Dwayne Robinson.
Michigan tried to climb back in the
third. McCaughey picked up a loose
puck and deflected a snapshot off of
Gillies' pads into the net, making the
score 6-4.
BUT NEW Hampshire closed the door
for good on the Wolverines, scoring two
goals within forty-nine seconds, and
Byrnes made the scoring spree official
in New England
THIRD PERIOD
Scoring: 4. M-McCaughey (Bjorkman) 1:53; 7.
UNH-Rossetti (Robinson, Leach) 10:58; 8.
UNH-Richmond (Hanley, Douris) 11:47; 9.
UNH-Byrnes (Herms, Robinson) 16:10.
Penalties: UNH-Muse (elbowing) 3:28;
UNH-Skidmore (highsticking) 7:48; M-Brauer
(hooking) 11:53; M-Carlile (highsticking) 15:55;
M-Norton (unsportsmanlike conduct) 15:55;
UNH-Lambert (highsticking) 15:55; M-Macnab
(hitting from behind) 18:26; M-Macnab (roughing)
18:26; UNH-Lambert (roughing) 18.26.
SCORING BY PERIOD

at 16:10, giving the Wildcats the 9-4 vic-
tory.
"I really like the way Michigan goes
for the net," said Wildcat coach Charlie
Hope. "But we had the puck a little bit
more tonight."
Where do the Wolverines go after
being outsored 16-8 in two games?
"I REALLY feel like we have to learn

9-4
from these games," said Berenson.
Said senior defenseman Mike Neff,
"We'll just have to get back to what got
us here - hard work."
The loss drops Michigan to 4-4. The
Wolverines will face Michigan State in
a home-and-home series next.
weekend.

THOMAS M. COOLEY LAW SCHOOL
- academic excellence in a practical legal environment -
*January, May or September Admission
*M orning, Afternoon or Evening Classes
*Part-time Flexible Scheduling in a
Three-Year Law School
- fully accredited bu the American Bar Association -

TH F THOMAS M.
COOLEY
LAW SCHOOL

For information, write:
Thomas M. Cooley Law School
Admissions Office
P.O. Box 13038, 217S. Capitol Ave.
Lansing, Michigan 48901
(517) 371-5140

Chiamp
... pummelled by 51 shots

MICHIGAN....................I
New Hampshire4................s3
Saves: M-Chiamp 42; UNHl-Gillies 36.

2
2
3

3
1-
3

T
4
-9

BIG TEN ROUNDUP:

Badgers tiHe Hawkeyes p
NA CITY (AP)-Iowa quarterback Ohio State 50, Indiana 7 Hoosiers 28 times and tied them once
nnk L.cr throw f n arntn Oho0tidrnthat span.

Jilin beat
r-in less
-'N
pik ers in
fjour
By JIM GINDIN
In a match typified by long streaks of
points and not very close games, it was
only a few points in the only close game
that made the difference as Illinois
handed the Wolverine volleyball team
its 12th consecutive conference loss 15-
6, 4-15, 15-13, 15-5 last night in the Cen-
tral Campus Recreational Building.
"I looked over at my assistant coach
when the score was about 12-12," said
Illinois coach Mike Hebert, "and told
him whoever won this game would win
the match. We served really well and
blocked very well in the crucial point."

IO
Chif

uucK ong rew tour imercepuuns
but also scored the tying touchdown as
the No. 17 Hawkeyes came from behind
to salvage a 10-10 tie against Wisconsin
yesterday.
Long's one-yard scoring dive, on a
quarterback keeper with 11:54 left to
play, helped Iowa, 6-2-1 overall and 5-1-
1 in the Big Ten, preserve its conferen-
ce lead.
Long, who is second in the nation in
passing efficiency, threw three inter-
ceptions in the first half and completed
only four passes in 13 attempts for 25
yards.

COLUMBUS (AP) - Sixteenth-
ranked Ohio State, even with injured
tailback Keith Byars playing sparingly,
crushed winless Indiana 50-7 yesterday
in Big Ten football.
Ohio State, 7-2 overall and 5-2 in the
league, built a 33-0 halftime lead before
scouts from seven bowls and the Ohio
Stadium sellout of 89,366.
Indiana, 0-9 overall and 0-7 in the Big
Ten, hasn't beaten Ohio State since
1951, the longest current non-winless
streak between major college football
teams. The Buckeyes have defeated the

Michigan State 27,
Northwestern 10
EAST LANSING (AP) - Freshman
tailback Lorenzo White ran for 170 yar-
ds and the first two touchdowns of his
collegiate career yesterday, leading
Michigan State to a 27-10 Big Ten foot-
ball victory over Northwestern.
The victory improved the Spartans'
record to 5-4 for the season and 4-3 in
the conference. Northwestern slipped
to 2-8 and 2-6.
Illinois 48, Minnesota 3
CHAMPAIGN (AP) - Fullback
Thomas Rooks raced 28 yards for a
touchdown yesterday and became just
the third player in Illinois history to
rush for 1,000 yards in a season as the
Illini crushed Minnesota 48-3.
Rooks was one of seven Illini to score
against the helpless Gophers, who
missed their starting quarterback on
offense and could not even stop the
Illinois second-string offense that
scored three touchdowns.

s eeDISCOUNT MUFFLERS
AMERICAN AND FOREIGN CAR SPECIALIST
FROM AS
nstalled By'' LOW AS..
Trained
Specialists
INSTALLED
eaturing
FITS MANY AT
gm' I(R *PRTICIPATIN

F

NG

One of the finest names
in automotive parts-.

WALL C RS

DEALERS

YPSILANTI

2606 Washtenaw Ave.......572-9177
(11/2 mile East of US 23)
Individually Owned & Operated
IN AND OUT IN 30 MINUTES IN MOST CASES
OPEN DAILY AND SAT.8-6PM
Copyright © 1984 Meineke -

MICHIGAN opened the match by
taking a 6-3 lead .on serving by3
Katherine Arnold. But Hebert coun-3
tered by sending freshman Paula
Douglass in to serve. Douglass won the
next twelve points, helped by Denise
Fracaro's six kills.
PThe Wolverines easily won game two
with seven service points from An-
drea Williams and five from Arnold.
They kept game three close, but
Fracaro's blocking and spiking finally
overwhelmed the Wolverines.
"Illinois was not playing real sharp,
especially at the beginning," said
Michigan coach Barb Canning. "We
should have taken advantage of it, but
we only capitalized on them for one
game."
"WE ROLLED over and played
dead," said Lisa Vahi about the end of
the third game.
Michigan, 10-14 overall, next plays at
Ferris State on Monday.

Associated Press
Michigan State's Lonnie Young skies in an attempt to block a punt against
Northwestern yesterday. Although Young failed, the Spartans won, 27-10.

Your
vote
counts!

Thanks to you,
Albert's Copying has been voted
the #1 copy service in Ann Arbor
as polled by The Michigan Daily.
So, to show our thanks we're celebrating with
savings and service that's sure to make you glad
you're an Albert's customer.
Come in with your copying job and this coupon
in hand-you'll get a big "thank you" from us and
a 15% discount off our already low prices.
Albert's Copying:
CONVENIENCE*SERVICE* SAVINGS
Now at 2 locations:

Judith James Wood for
Probate (Juvenile) Judge
ST IN QUALIFICATIONS
" Senior Assistant Public Defender * Assistant Attorney
General-Department of Mental Health * Instructor of
Juvenile Law " Extensive Juvenile Court practice
ST IN EXPERIENCE
" Junior High School Teacher* Nursery School Teachers
Foster Parent " Mother of three children, ages 10-17
ST IN LEADERSHIP
" State of Michigan Family Living Council 9 Board of
Directors, Perry Nursery School o Judiciary Committee-
Washtenaw Trial Lawyers Association * Lecturer, State
Police Academy-"Prosecution of Child Abuse"
ST IN COMMUNITY SUPPORT
, "Preferred Candidate"-Washtenaw County Bar Asso-
ciation Poll " Endorsed as "the standout in this field"-
Ann Arbor News, July 31,1984 " Endorsed by the Michi-
gan Education Association, the National Organization for
Women, AFSCME, UAW and the Huron Valley Labor
Council 9 First in the primary election

r

535 E. Liberty
next to Michigan Theatre
995-0444

1217 S. University
across from Campus Theatre
995-2111

I

I

Back to Top

© 2024 Regents of the University of Michigan